Tax Saving Tips: June 2022
Alert: A Massive New FinCEN Filing Requirement Is Coming
Do you own a corporation,
limited liability company (LLC), limited partnership, limited liability partnership, limited liability limited partnership, or
business trust?
Or are you planning to form one of these
entities?
If so, be alert. There’s a new federal
filing requirement coming.
Back in 2021, Congress
passed a new law called the Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) that requires
corporations, LLCs, and other business entities to provide information about
their owners to the Department of the
Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), which is a unit
separate from the IRS.
The CTA is part of a
government crackdown on corruption, money laundering, terrorist financing, tax fraud, and
other illicit activity. It targets
the use of anonymous shell companies that facilitate the flow and sheltering of
illicit money in the United States.
Businesses subject to
the law will have to file a “beneficial owner report” with FinCEN, including each beneficial owner’s full legal name,
date of birth, and residential street address, as well as an identifying number
from a legal document such as a driver’s license or passport. FinCEN will
include the information in a database for use by law enforcement, national security and intelligence
agencies, and federal regulators that enforce anti-money-laundering laws. The
database will not be publicly accessible.
Violations of the CTA can
result in a $500-a-day penalty (up to $10,000) and
up to two years’ imprisonment.
The CTA did not take effect
immediately. Rather, Congress gave the FinCEN time to write regulations
governing how the CTA should be applied and to give businesses a heads-up about
the new law. FinCEN has now issued its proposed regulations, and they take a
fairly hard line on how the law will be applied.
Here are four things the new
regulations make clear.
1. The filing requirement
may begin soon. The CTA goes into effect
when the proposed regulations become final, which is expected to occur sometime
in mid-to-late 2022. As soon as it
goes into effect,
·
new corporations, LLCs, and other entities will
have to comply with the filing requirement within 14 days of being formed, and
·
existing entities will have one year to comply.
2. Millions of small
businesses are affected. The
reporting requirements will apply to almost
every small business that is not a sole proprietorship or general partnership,
including corporations, LLCs, limited liability partnerships, limited liability
limited partnerships, business trusts, and most limited partnerships—over 30
million in all.
Larger companies with more than 20 full-time
employees and $5 million in gross receipts are exempt.
3. There will be many
beneficial owners. The proposed regulations
make it clear that a company can have multiple beneficial owners, and it may
not always be easy to identify them all. There are two broad categories of
beneficial owners:
·
any individual who owns 25
percent or more of the company, and
·
any individual who, directly or indirectly, exercises substantial
control over the company.
4. Law and accounting firms
are not exempt. Neither the CTA nor the
proposed regulations contain any exemption for legal or accounting firms,
except for the relatively few public accounting firms registered under Section
102 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. Thus, any law or accounting firm that is
a professional corporation or an LLC will have to file a beneficial owner
report unless it has more than 20 employees and $5 million in annual income.
Deduct a Cruise to Mexico
You may not have thought of
this, but taking a cruise ship to Mexico for a business meeting is acceptable
as a deductible form of transportation.
Because Mexico is in the tax
law–defined North American area, the law says that you need no stronger business
reason to deduct your trip to Mexico than you need to deduct a trip to Chicago,
Illinois, or Scottsdale, Arizona.
Less-than-one-week rule. If your trip is outside the 50 states
but inside the North American area and if the trip is for seven or fewer days
(excluding the day of departure), then the law allows you to deduct the entire
cost of travel to and from this business destination. Mexico fits this location
rule.
Cruise ship transportation. The law authorizes any type of
transportation to and from your travel destination, so long as it is not lavish
or extravagant. The cruise ship cost is not a lavish or extravagant expense, as
the law precludes this possibility by placing luxury water limits on this type
of travel.
The daily luxury water limit
is twice the highest federal per diem rate allowable at the time of your
travel.
Example. Say you are going to travel by cruise
ship during September 2022. The $433 maximum federal per diem rate for
September 2022 comes from Nantucket, Massachusetts. Your daily luxury water
limit is $866 (2 x $433).
Thus, for you and your spouse,
two business travelers, the daily limit is $1,732. On a six-night cruise,
that’s a cruise-ship cost ceiling of $10,392. If you spend $12,000, your
deduction is limited to $10,392. If you spend $8,000, you deduct $8,000.
Are Self-Directed IRAs for Real Estate a
Good Idea?
The stock market is tanking
while real estate continues to skyrocket.
If your retirement savings
have taken a hit, you may be wondering if this is the time to invest in real
estate through your IRA, Roth IRA, or SEP-IRA.
You can’t invest in real
estate with a traditional IRA or Roth IRA (or SEP-IRA) you establish with a
bank, brokerage, or trust company. These types of IRA custodians typically
limit you to a narrow range of investments, such as publicly traded stocks,
bonds, mutual funds, ETFs, and CDs.
But you can invest in real
estate if you establish a self-directed IRA with a custodian that allows
self-directed investments. There are dozens of such IRA custodians.
Real estate is the single
most popular investment in self-directed IRAs. The self-directed IRA can be
used for all types of real estate investments: multi-family rental properties,
single-family homes, commercial rentals, raw land, farmland, international real
estate, tax lien certificates, trust deeds and mortgage notes, and private
placements.
Investing in real estate
through a self-directed IRA is one way to diversify your retirement holdings.
There are also some tax advantages.
And there are several
disadvantages and complications you should carefully consider.
First, you need to
understand that owning real estate in a self-directed IRA is not like owning it
any other way, because you and your self-directed IRA must be totally separate—self-dealing
is not allowed.
You, the self-directed IRA owner, should not benefit from
your self-directed IRA other than through distributions from the self-directed
IRA. And your self-directed IRA itself should not benefit from you other than
through contributions you make to the account.
In practical terms, this means you, your relatives, and
certain other “disqualified persons” cannot do business with your self-directed
IRA. For example, you can’t
·
sell property you personally
own to your self-directed IRA,
·
purchase or lease property
from your self-directed IRA,
·
personally guarantee loans taken out by your self-directed
IRA to purchase property,
·
receive rental income from a rental property held in a
self-directed IRA, or
·
repair or improve any self-directed IRA property.
If you do any of these
things, your self-directed IRA could lose its tax-deferred status. If that
happens, you then pay taxes on the value of all the property the IRA owns.
When your self-directed IRA
owns real estate, you also don’t benefit from real estate tax deductions such
as depreciation and the 20 percent qualified business income (QBI) deduction.
It may not be pleasant to
think about, but upon your death, there is no step-up in basis for real estate
held in the self-directed IRA. Instead, your beneficiaries pay tax at ordinary
rates on any money or property distributed from a traditional self-directed
IRA. This eliminates one of the most valuable tax benefits for real estate
owners.
Don’t get the idea that
self-directed IRAs are all bad. None of the income from property held in a
self-directed IRA is taxable to you personally. Likewise, if you sell property
in a self-directed IRA, you need pay no personal tax on any profit. You pay tax
only when you withdraw money from a traditional IRA.
With a self-directed Roth
IRA, you pay no tax at all on withdrawals after age 59 1/2, provided your IRA
held the property for at least five years.
But you need to balance
these benefits with all the potential drawbacks.
The IRS Wants to Know about Your Crypto
Cryptocurrency such as
bitcoin is all the rage these days. Crypto is not legal money. It is property,
similar to gold. Like gold, its use can result in taxable income.
The IRS is concerned that
you and millions of Americans are using crypto without paying tax on the
earnings. To clarify that it expects you and other taxpayers to report crypto
earnings, the IRS added the following question about cryptocurrency to the top
of Form 1040:
At any time during 2021, did
you receive, sell, exchange, or otherwise dispose of any financial interest in
any virtual currency?
You must answer this question under penalty of perjury, even
if you have never heard of bitcoin and don’t know what cryptocurrency is. You
can’t leave the field blank.
Unfortunately, this is something of a trick question. It is
so broadly worded; you’d think any transaction involving digital currency
requires a “yes” answer. But that is not the case.
IRS guidance makes clear that it is interested only in virtual
currency transactions that result in taxable income (or loss) that must be
reported on a taxpayer’s return.
Thus, for example, if you
simply purchased bitcoin during the year and held on to it, you should answer
“no” to the crypto question. The same goes if you received crypto as a gift, or
transferred crypto from one wallet to another.
You should answer “yes” to
the crypto question if you purchased or sold goods or services with crypto, received
new crypto through mining or staking activities, exchanged crypto for dollars
or other crypto, or got new crypto from a hard fork. All these activities
result in taxable income (or loss).
What should you do if you answered the crypto question wrong?
If you answered the crypto
question “yes” when you should have answered “no,” you don’t have to do
anything. There is no need to amend your tax return.
On the other hand, if you
answered “no” when it should have been “yes” and you did not report your
taxable virtual currency transactions, you need to file an amended or
superseding return. If you fail to do so, you may get a letter from the IRS
advising you to file an amended return and pay any taxes due. The IRS began
sending out such letters in 2019.
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